Hi Bob,
Thanks for your comments. We have been searching for the missing Peter Christ for many years. (smile) To make things even more confusing there is a local rifle signed PC. Bivin's attributed it to Davidson School. I finally documented him last year. He lived in Rowan County but trained under Andreas Betz. I think we can put that one to bed. We will reveal him in the book. MESDA now owns the P C rifle.
One name I have not seen mentioned is George Betz. He was Andreas younger brother. He moved to Rowan County when his older brother. A Rowan deed list him as a gun smith. When and where did he train?
Scott, please send your email address and phone number to mbriggs@callcoverage.com for follow up questions.
I would request that everyone on this forum please forward me contact information for any collectors or families that own Eagle or Distelfink patchbox rifles that look as if they may be from North Carolina.
I believe there are many examples that we have not seen.
We collectors who live in North Carolina are blessed to see many more local rifles than people who do not live here. Of the nine Longrifle Schools in this state we agree on what to look for and how to separate rifles into the correct school most of the time. The big exception to this is the Salem - Davidson Schools. We have long discussed if Salem and Davidson where two separate schools or one big school. There is no question that while there is a lot of similarities between the rifles from two schools, they mostly operated independently from each other.
To many collectors the rifles from these two schools look the same. They do for the most part share the same stock architecture and fore-stock molding. They also both used Eagle patchbox finials on most of their rifles. They are also a few rifles with Distelfink patchbox finials found on rifles in both schools. There are a few subtle differences in the two schools I have learned to look for. The barrel tang, fore-stock molding termination, and flow of the wrist to the comb help to determine the school. Another issue is the great number of unsigned rifles from these two schools. John Bivins' believed the rifles look so similar because the top Davidson School gun smiths Henry Ledford and Andrew Long both likely trained under Christoph Vogler. That fact has never been documented. The Salem Collegium did often complain about Christoph bringing in "outsiders" to work in his gun shop.
Bill Ivey, Kenneth Orr, Arron Capel, Joe Byerly, Blake Stevenson and myself often friendly disagree on if a unsigned rifle is from Salem or Davidson. We have all had many fun discussions on this subject. I have asked Blake to please include a chapter on how to tell the difference between double-set triggers built by Christoph Vogler [who set the standard for Salem] and triggers built by Davidson County blacksmith James L. Smith. [He built all of the triggers used by the Davidson School rifle makers, but not any of the Salem school makers.] We will include a lot of photographs.
It is my hope that the two new books by Blake and I will help students and collectors appreciate these beautiful rifles and the men who made them in the future.
One last question for Eric. Did any of the Moravian gun smiths in Pennsylvania use the Distelfink patchbox finial?
Michael Briggs